The Swiss, God bless 'em!

Posted by Thersites on UTC 2017-06-07 07:07.

Swiss marketing gurus are always good for some innocent fun when they do
their branding in English. The name has to have 'Switzerland' or
preferably 'Swiss' in it, of course, because that is the Swissness brand. Then the fun begins.

The Grand Tour of Switzerland

Innocent foreigner drivers will follow the Grand Tour signs and be taken
along some of the busiest stretches of
motorway and some of the most annoying and tedious other roads in the country. A
grand tour it is not. The mother-tongue speaker of English would find
'The Expensive Thrash Round Switzerland' more accurate.

This stretch of the Swiss Grand Tour gives a new meaning to the phrase 'Are we there yet?'. 'Watch the speed camera! Oops, too late…'.

The Swiss government is currently pondering the politics of adding a huge
surcharge on petrol (shsss! – don't mention d****l) in order to save the
planet. Oh, and you will need to stump up 40 CHF in order to be allowed to drive on the motorway sections. Happy motoring!

Swiss Knife Valley

The Swiss Knife Valley must have the most repellent name of any tourist destination worldwide,
with the exception of Death Valley.

Not really a valley, but have your knife or a can of mace handy at all times. Concealed carry of a penknife is allowed.

It is not even a valley, it's the
unexciting basin around the town of Schwyz, which is the home of Victorinox, the
makers of what used to be called in real English the 'Swiss Army
penknife'. The company is paying for the branding, so 'Swiss Knife' or
'Swiss pocketknife' [yuk!] it is. A language disaster of the first
order, too late to undo.

Gents

A recent arrival is the Gents range of products. The principal member is 'Gents Swiss Roots Tonic Water', which is bad
enough, but has to compete with the ultimately unparse-able 'Gents Swiss Craft Ginger Brew' and,
worst of all – whisper it softly – 'Vermouth de Gents' ('Swiss Roots And
Herbs Wine'). Let's leave 'Herbs Wine' with its echoes of the 'Tijuana Brass' to one side.
The Swiss bonbuvant is obviously untroubled by the lack of
apostrophes and is probably leaning on the bar, fingering his cravat and thinking of Steed and Mrs
Peel in the Avengers TV series (Mit Schirm, Charme und Melone, 'with umbrella,
charm and bowler-hat' as it's known in the German speaking world – yet another language disaster to add to our list).

No idea what the aeronautical motif is doing on the label of the tonic water.
Fact check: the yellow gentian is otherwise the basis for the French apéritif 'SUZE',
a not unpleasant drink which was at one time a popular snifter in Switzerland.
The plant is growing wild in fields a short distance from my current location.

In contrast, the English person – the scruffy one in the corner – is sniffing the glass suspiciously, quite put off by the thought of the
gents in the Dog and Badger at chucking-out time, when probably even the
dog and the badger have been in there. It gives a further dimension of
meaning to the phrase 'toilet water'.

Presumably 'Swiss roots' is intended to mean 'plant roots' as in 'root
vegetables'. The multicultural mind of the young English person in the
corner just thinks of 'roots' as in 'I got no style, I strictly roots'.
'Jerk Tonic Water', perhaps – or probably not…. Move on quickly. This stuff is actually a particularly nasty example of cultural appropriation.

Swiss (the airline, not the people)

Possibly one of the worst branding disasters in recent Swiss history was the transformation of
'Swissair' into 'Swiss'. It is true that, after the embarrassment of the grounding of Swissair,
the embarrassed ones were in a bit of a rush to come up with a
name for its successor, but using an especially complicated
adjective/noun country/people identifier as a simple name was never
going to work. No one in their right mind would rename Lufthansa as
'German' or 'Germans'. 'I'm flying with "Swiss"' is just as ridiculous
to the English ear as 'I'm flying with "German"' or 'I'm flying with "British"'. Too late.

An aircraft flying the Swiss flag, labelled with the nationality of the occupants. The owners are Germans.